Add free shipping to your order with these great books
Jack Nicholson : The Early Years - Robert Crane

Jack Nicholson

The Early Years

By: Robert Crane, Christopher Fryer

eBook | 7 July 2020

Sorry, we are not able to source the ebook you are looking for right now.

We did a search for other ebooks with a similar title, however there were no matches. You can try selecting from a similar category, click on the author's name, or use the search box above to find your ebook.

A biography based on personal interviews with the actor as well as his friends and fellow filmmakers: "Entertaining . . . A must for cinema students." -Hollywood Reporter

In 1975, Jack Nicholson was just becoming a household name after starring in, writing, or producing twenty-five films including Easy Rider, Five Easy Pieces, The Last Detail, and Chinatown. At the time, Robert Crane and Christopher Fryer interviewed Nicholson for what began as a thesis for a University of Southern California film class—but quickly morphed into a larger portrait of Nicholson's unique craft. It would become the first book about the icon, and the only one done with his participation.

Crane and Fryer conducted their interviews with Nicholson with the intent of showcasing the young star as he saw himself, while also interviewing many of Nicholson's close friends and fellow filmmakers, including Dennis Hopper, Roger Corman, Hal Ashby, Ann-Margret, Robert Evans, and Bruce Dern, providing a comprehensive profile of the actor's early years in the industry. The result is a unique portrait of the life and career of a man who has to date earned three Academy Awards and twelve nominations, seven Golden Globes, and the American Film Institute's Life Achievement Award.
"A true insider's look at Nicholson not only as a writer, director, and actor, but also as a private man who desires a private life." -Los Angeles Daily News

Includes photographs

Originally published as Jack Nicholson: Face to Face

Industry Reviews

""The only book written with [Nicholson's] blessing.... The interviews are illuminating."-- Los Angeles Weekly" --

on